With no other reason to go to Vienna, I would travel there
simply to be able to eat its Semmeln and Schnecken. The Semmeln are bread rolls widely used for
every meal. With butter and jam (or
butter and cheese or butter and ham), they make a tasty breakfast. Also, they
perfectly accompany soups and main courses served for lunch and supper. Fresh,
light, and flaky, they are the best bread I can imagine.
While I like Semmelm, I love Schnecken – the pastry, not the
slimy mollusks. The German word “Schnecken” means snails, but it is also the
name given to a pastry in the shape of a spiraled circle, which, I suppose,
vaguely resembles the shell of a snail.
This shape is often seen in cinnamon rolls sold in Panera and other bakeries
and coffee shops in North America. However, make no mistake about it: American cinnamon rolls
are to Schnecken as a slice of white bread is to a Semmel. The differences are
huge.
Compared to a Schnecken, most American cinnamon rolls are
heavy, doughy, very sweet and super cinnamon-y. They assault the taste buds
with sugar and weigh heavily on the stomach. In contrast, Schnecken are much
lighter, flakier, less sweet, and have a more subtle taste. Don’t get me wrong: I love sugar as much as
most Americans and have enjoyed my share of American cinnamon rolls; however, I
still prefer the Viennese version.
Schnecke, Ready for Breakfast |
While most freshly made Semmeln taste pretty much the same
wherever you buy them, Schnecken differ from bakery to bakery. As with Semmeln,
Schnecken should be eaten only when fresh (avoid packaged Schnecken).
Fortunately, Vienna has a bakery with fresh Semmeln and Schnecken within a
short walk of almost every Viennese, so both can be purchased daily.
Searching for the
Best Schnecke: The Bakeries
Since eating my first Schnecken in 1967, bought at a
Konditorei on Schottengasse, I have not been discriminating in where I purchase
Schnecken. Typically, when in Vienna, I buy a daily Schnecke from the bakery nearest
to where I am staying, or I pick one up at a shop in the subway (U-bahn)
station that I use most often.
After decades of indiscriminate buying, I decided in
December to determine which bakery makes the Schnecke that I like most – in
other words, to find the bakery making the best Schnecken. So, over a period of about ten days, I bought
and tested Schencken brought at seven different bakeries.
Before discussing the bakeries and their Schnecken, I should
mention that Schencken are no longer a uniform product. They now come in
different flavors, including chocolate and vanilla. Of those, the cinnamon Schnecke (Zimtschencke) is most like the traditional Schnecken that used to be sold in every
bakery.
For the purpose of my taste testing, I compared the regular
or Zimtschencken from seven different bakeries. Included among these seven
bakerys were four with the most stores in and around Vienna. They were:
Anker. This bread company, founded in 1891, has over
100 outlets in Vienna. It is a very visible chain, with convenient locations on
major streets, subway stations, and other places with substantial foot
traffic.
The history of the company is here: http://www.ankerbrot.at/ankerbrot_ag/firmengeschichte
Anker’s main website is here: http://www.ankerbrot.at/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Ankerbrot.AG
Ströck. This bakery chain has about 75 branches in
and near Vienna. It is a family-owned bakery whose first shop was opened in
Vienna in 1969.
Its history is at this link: http://www.stroeck.at/service/das-familienunternehmen/die-geschichte
The company’s main website:
http://www.stroeck.at/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Stroeck
Der Mann. This company,
which has about 70 stores in and near Vienna, traces its history to a bakery
opened by Anton Mann in 1860 in Lower Austria. In 1909, it moved to Vienna. The
company’s slogan is „Der Mann der Verwöhnt,“ which means “The man who satisfies.”
The history of Der Mann is here: http://www.dermann.at/unternehmen/geschichte/
More about this business here: http://www.dermann.at/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Baeckerei.Der.Mann
Felber.
The Felber bread company has about 45 stores in and near
Vienna. It was founded in 1957 in Vienna’s 16th district and is
managed by members of the Felber family. Its strange slogan is “Felber bäckt
selber,” which literally means “Felber bakes itself.” I think the real meaning
is that Felber bakes everything it sells.
The company’s main web site is http://www.felberbrot.at/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Felberbrot
Aside from the four large companies, I tested Schnecken from
a German-based company that has over 300 stores in Germany, but only one in
Vienna. That store, Heberer, opened a couple of years ago in the new shopping
center built when the West Train Station was refurbished.
Heberer, Der
Traditionsbäcker
Heberer, which features “Vienna style” baking, traces its
history to 1891, when Georg Heberer opened a store in Offenbach, Germany. In
1928, his son Georg became a master baker at Kaffeehaus Demel in Vienna before
returning to Offenbach. The slogan of the store is “Beim Heberer, da
Schmeckt’s,” which means, roughly, Things taste good at Heberers.
The history of this bakery is here: http://www.heberer.de/de/unternehmen/erfolgsgeschichte/1891-1930
Its main website is http://www.heberer.de/de/home
The website for the Vienna branch of this bakery is http://www.heberer-traditionsbaecker.at/
I also tried a Schnecke from one of the smaller family-owned
bakeries in Vienna, this one with six stores:
Blutaumüller Café Bäckerei.
This family owned business first store opened in 1953.
A short history of the firm is here: http://www.blutaumueller.at/unternehmen.html
The company’s main web site is http://www.blutaumueller.at/
The final place from which I obtained a Schnecke was a
neighborhood bakery, located a couple of blocks from the apartment I rented in
December. This owner-operated bakery is not part of any chain.
Bäckerei Rieppel. This neighborhood bakery and café is
located at Märzstrasse 71 in the 15th district. It serves up its own
pastry, breads, etc., but it also serves a moderately priced lunch Tuesday
through Friday. Its sign says that it is “Der gastliche bäckerei,” that translates
as “The hospitable bakery.” The bakery does not have a web page, but does have
a Facebook page which is as follows:
Of course, Vienna has many more bakeries than these seven
(which together have over 300 stores in the city), including some bakeries with
multiple stores and many owner-operated neighborhood bakeries. Thus, the competition
for “best Schnecken” excludes, for now, the Schnecken at the bakeries I did not
visit. Nevertheless, I would estimate that the bakeries operated by the seven
companies included in the sample sell at least 80 percent of the freshly made
Schnecken sold in the city.
Searching for Vienna
Best Schnecke: The Taste Test
In taste testing the Schnecken, I established six criteria
to use for the comparison: (1) Optimum
sweetness (plenty sweet, but not too sweet), (2) Nuts (the amount and the tastiness
of the nuts), (3) size (the bigger the circle the better the score), (4)
crispiness (how light and flaky it is), (5) the vividness of the cinnamon (it
should be evident but not overwhelm other tastes), and (6) overall taste/appeal. I awarded up to five points for how well each
Schnecke scored on each criterion.
In reporting the results of the taste test, I first have to
say that the scoring was very close. Even the worst-ranked Schnecke was very
tasty, and I would gladly eat it if a higher ranked pastries was not available
nearby. Here, in reverse order, are my rankings:
#7 Rieppel. Average score: 4.0. I ranked this Schnecke highest is its use of
nuts, but it was not sweet enough for me, and it had no glaze. It was medium
sized.
#6 Ströck. Average score: 4.1. This Schnecke ranked at about 4.0 on all of
the criteria, but lacked a feature that pushed it ahead of the other others.
Quite good, but not transcendent.
#5 Felber.
Average score: 4.2. The Felber
Schnecke received 4.0 scores on nuts, size, and crispness, but 4.5 on
sweetness. It had an excellent cinnamon taste, but my overall impression of it
was “good but not great.”
#4 Blutaumüller.
Average score: 4.6. This Schnecke has a simple, but appealing, taste.
The sweetness level was high, with a nice cinnamon overtone. However, it was lacking
in nuts. I liked its size: it was larger and thicker than most of the others.
#3 Der Mann. Average score: 4.7. Sweet and laden with cinnamon, this Schnecken
tastes great. However, its use of nuts is not very impressive. It was an
average size.
#2 Heberer. Average score: 4.75. Perfect sweetness, plus crunchy nuts. This
Schnecken could use a tiny bit more cinnamon. This schnecken has good heft and
a memorably complex taste. Its size is about average.
#1 Anker. Average score: 4.8. This is one huge
Schnecken! A two hander. It has a nice balance of sweetness and cinnamon taste.
It integrates the nuts nicely into the overall package. This Schnecke is so
good, I want one now!
There you have it. In my opinion, Anker, the bakery with the
most stores in Vienna, makes the best Schnecken (at least, Zimtschnecken) in
the city, followed closely by Heberer, a bakery with only one store in the city; Der Mann, another large bakery; and Blutaumueller, a smaller bakery. The
other bakeries also sell fine, tasty Schnecken. In truth, you cannot go wrong
buying a Schnecke in any of Vienna’s bakeries. I look forward to revisiting
these store and trying others the next time I make to Wien.
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